ABSTRACT

The acclaim for Lippmann the political thinker has at times obscured the equally impressive accomplishments of Lippmann the journalist. His output was prodigious, his influence on journalism significant. According to James Reston: "He has given a generation of newspapermen a wider vision of their duty." Early Writings provides a unique opportunity to rediscover this journalistic Lippmann and to observe the formative years of a brilliant mind.In 1913, just three years out of Harvard, Lippmann was asked by Herbert Croly to help plan and edit a new "weekly of ideas," the New Republic. Beginning with its first issue in 1914 and continuing through the following six years, Lippmann wrote numerous signed and unsigned articles. Here are the best of them, written during the exciting political era that began with the trauma of World War I and ended in the stasis of Republican Normalcy.Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., places Lippmann in historical context while recreating the intellectual ambiance of the Wilsonian era. His annotations identify little-remembered personages and clarify issues that time has befogged. But in another sense, the issues and personages of 1910-1920 are only too familiar. Our world is still a world of war, ineffectual international political organizations, disappointed idealism, nerve-wracking platitudes, social unrest, and slinking politicians.

part |90 pages

War And Peace

chapter |4 pages

Force And Ideas

chapter |2 pages

Defining Terms

chapter |3 pages

Vera Cruz

chapter |4 pages

Timid Neutrality

chapter |4 pages

Life Is Cheap

chapter |3 pages

A Little Child Shall Lead Them

chapter |3 pages

Are We Pro-German?

chapter |5 pages

Trade And The Flag

chapter |6 pages

An Appeal To The President

chapter |5 pages

Mr. Wilson’S Great Utterance

chapter |4 pages

America To Europe, August, 1916

chapter |4 pages

Perishable Books

chapter |4 pages

British-American Irritation

chapter |4 pages

Poltroons And Pacifists

chapter |5 pages

The Will To Believe

chapter |6 pages

America Speaks

chapter |7 pages

The Defense Of The Atlantic World

chapter |1 pages

The Conditions For Peace

chapter |3 pages

The World In Revolution

chapter |4 pages

The Great Decision

chapter |2 pages

Beyond National Government

chapter |7 pages

Assuming We Join

part |106 pages

Politics

chapter |3 pages

The Palmer Letter

chapter |4 pages

Taking A Chance

chapter |7 pages

Brandeis

chapter |3 pages

Untrustworthy?

chapter |4 pages

The Case Against Brandeis

chapter |6 pages

The Issues Of 1916

chapter |9 pages

At The Chicago Conventions

chapter |10 pages

The Puzzle Of Hughes

chapter |2 pages

The Progressives

chapter |3 pages

Honor And Election Returns

chapter |3 pages

Chicago—December Fifth

chapter |4 pages

In The Next Four Years

chapter |4 pages

And Congress

chapter |2 pages

Thank You For Nothing

chapter |13 pages

Leonard Wood

chapter |10 pages

The Logic Of Lowden

chapter |6 pages

Mcadoo

chapter |8 pages

Chicago 1920

chapter |5 pages

Is Harding A Republican?

part |94 pages

Unrest

chapter |2 pages

Quiet, Please

chapter |2 pages

Minimum Wage

chapter |4 pages

Devil’S Advocates

chapter |5 pages

Lending And Spending

chapter |4 pages

The Railroad Crisis And After

chapter |4 pages

The Averted Railway Strike

chapter |4 pages

An Ineffective Remedy

chapter |9 pages

Can The Strike Be Abandoned?

chapter |20 pages

The Campaign Against Sweating

chapter |2 pages

Shorter Hours

chapter |7 pages

The N.A.M. Speaks

chapter |4 pages

Mr. Rockefeller On The Stand

chapter |4 pages

The Rockefeller Plan In Colorado

chapter |23 pages

Unrest

part |50 pages

Arts And Other Matters

chapter |4 pages

Legendary John Reed

chapter |5 pages

Freud And The Layman

chapter |5 pages

Scandal

chapter |4 pages

The Footnote

chapter |1 pages

Inconspicuous Creation

chapter |3 pages

“Plumb Insane”

chapter |4 pages

Angels To The Rescue

chapter |4 pages

“Americanism”

chapter |3 pages

Miss Lowell And Things

chapter |4 pages

Science As Scapegoat

chapter |5 pages

The Lost Theme

chapter |6 pages

The White Passion